Enfilade

New Book | Color Charts: A History

Posted in books by Editor on January 5, 2024

With the original French edition (Nuanciers: éloge du subtil) published in October, the English translation is due in February from Princeton UP:

Anne Varichon, Color Charts: A History, translated by Kate Deimling (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2024), 284 pages, ISBN: 978-0691255170, £45 / $55.

book coverA beautifully illustrated history of the many inventive, poetic, and alluring ways in which color swatches have been selected and staged

The need to categorize and communicate color has mobilized practitioners and scholars for centuries. Color Charts describes the many different methods and ingenious devices developed since the fifteenth century by doctors, naturalists, dyers, and painters to catalog fragments of colors. With the advent of industrial society, manufacturers and merchants developed some of the most beautiful and varied tools ever designed to present all the available colors. Thanks to them, society has discovered the abundance of color embodied in a plethora of materials: cuts of fabric, leather, paper, and rubber; slats of wood and linoleum; delicate skeins of silk; careful deposits of paint and pastels; fragments of lipstick; and arrangements of flower petals. These samples shape a visual culture and a chromatic vocabulary and instill a deep desire for color.

Anne Varichon traces the emergence of modern color charts from a set of processes developed over the centuries in various contexts. She presents illuminating examples that bring this remarkable story to life, from ancient writings revealing attention to precise shade to contemporary designers’ color charts, dyers’ notebooks, and Werner’s famous color nomenclature. Varichon argues that color charts have linked generations of artists, artisans, scientists, industrialists, and merchants, and have played an essential and enduring role in the way societies think about color. Drawing on nearly two hundred documents from public and private collections, almost all of them previously unpublished, this wonderfully illustrated book shows how the color chart, in its many distinct forms and expressions, is a practical tool that has transcended its original purpose to become an educational aid and subject of contemplation worthy of being studied and admired.

Anne Varichon is an anthropologist specializing in material cultures and ideas about color. She is the author of Colors: What They Mean and How to Make Them.

Battle of New Orleans Historical Symposium, 2024

Posted in conferences (to attend) by Editor on January 5, 2024

From Nunez Community College, with registration available at Eventbrite:

The 9th Annual Battle of New Orleans Historical Symposium
Nunez Community College, Chalmette (New Orleans), 5–6 January 2024

The 9th Annual Battle of New Orleans Historical Symposium will take place January 5th and 6th in Chalmette, Louisiana, at Nunez Community College (on Friday) and at the St. Bernard Council Chambers (on Saturday).

f r i d a y ,  5  j a n u a r y

9.00  Coffee

9.30  Welcome and Opening Remarks — Tina Tinney

Attributed to José Francisco Xavier de Salazar y Mendoza, Portrait of Captain Joseph Bernard Vallière d’Hauterive, ca. 1791–95, oil on canvas (Little Rock: Historic Arkansas Museum). Vallière d’Hauterive was the Grenoble-born commandant of the Arkansas Post from 1787 to 1790; this portrait was likely painted upon his return to New Orleans.

9.45  Morning Talks
• Overview of Battle of New Orleans — William Hyland
• ‘Nothing Pleases Them So Much as the Uniform’: Martial Culture and Military Life in Early Louisiana — Philippe Halbert
• The Past as Prelude: The Impact of Spain and the Galvez Expedition on the American Victory in the Battle of New Orleans — Bradford Waters

12.15  Lunch

1.30  Afternoon Talks
• ‘Pirate City’: Tracing Property Records of Selected Members of Jean Laffite’s Baratarian Pirate Syndicate who Played Prominent Roles in the War Effort of the Winter of 1814–15 — Ina Fandrich
• What if New Orleans had been Taken by the British in 1815? — Harold Youmans

4.00  Wine and Cheese Reception

s a t u r d a y ,  6  j a n u a r y

10.00  Welcome — Katherine Lemoine

10.05  Morning Talks
• A Reminiscence of the Battle of New Orleans by Bernard de Marigny — William Hyland
• Native American Influence in the Battle of New Orleans: Houma Indians in Louisiana — Colleen Billiot
• Scottish Heraldry: A Window into a Culture — Christen Raby Elliot

12.45  Closing Remarks — William Hyland